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Difference between revisions of "Magnesium Green"

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=== Experimental media for the MgG assay ===
=== Experimental media for the MgG assay ===
: This method is not suitable for buffers containing high concentrations of Mg<sup>2+</sup>. It has been used in the Oroboros Laboratories with a modified formulation of [[MiR05]] with 1 mM MgCl<sub>2</sub> instead of the original 3 mM MgCl<sub>2</sub>.  
: This method is not suitable for buffers containing high concentrations of Mg<sup>2+</sup>. It has been used in the Oroboros Laboratories with a modified formulation of [[MiR05]] with 1 mM MgCl<sub>2</sub> instead of the original 3 mM MgCl<sub>2</sub>. The medium should be prepared without MgCl<sub>2</sub> (which should be added only during or right before the experiment), with the following composition (0.5 mM EGTA; 60 mM lactobionic acid; 20 mM taurine; 10 mM KH<sub>2</sub>PO<sub>4</sub>; 20 mM HEPES; 110 mM D-Sucrose; 1 g/L BSA (fatty acid free). The pH is adjusted with KOH to 7.1 as for [[MiR05-Kit]], see [[MiPNet22.10 MiR05-kit]] for more information.
: For the formulation of the buffer with which the method was described ("ANT buffer"), see: [[Chinopoulos 2014 Methods Enzymol]].
: For the formulation of the buffer with which the method was described ("ANT buffer"), see: [[Chinopoulos 2014 Methods Enzymol]].
: Note that while Magnesium Green ''K''<sub>d</sub> for Mg<sup>2+</sup> is 1.0 mM, Magnesium Green ''K''<sub>d</sub> for Ca<sup>2+</sup> is 6 µM: this means that Magnesium Green binds stronger to Ca<sup>2+</sup> than to Mg<sup>2+</sup> and therefore cannot be used in the presence of significant concentrations of free Ca<sup>2+</sup>. Possible contaminating transition metals should be chelated by a small (µM range) concentration of EGTA, EDTA or DTPA.
: Note that while Magnesium Green ''K''<sub>d</sub> for Mg<sup>2+</sup> is 1.0 mM, Magnesium Green ''K''<sub>d</sub> for Ca<sup>2+</sup> is 6 µM: this means that Magnesium Green binds stronger to Ca<sup>2+</sup> than to Mg<sup>2+</sup> and therefore cannot be used in the presence of significant concentrations of free Ca<sup>2+</sup>. Possible contaminating transition metals should be chelated by a small (µM range) concentration of EGTA, EDTA or DTPA.

Revision as of 11:17, 23 March 2020


high-resolution terminology - matching measurements at high-resolution


Magnesium Green

Description

Magnesium Green (MgG) belongs to the extrinsic fluorophores applied for measurement of mitochondrial ATP production with mitochondrial preparations. This dye fluoresces when bound to Mg2+. The technique to measure mitochondrial ATP production is based on the fact that Mg2+ present different dissociation constants for ADP and ATP, and the adenine nucleotide translocase (ANT) exchanges ATP for ADP.

Abbreviation: MgG

Reference: Chinopoulos 2014 Methods Enzymol


MitoPedia methods: Fluorometry 




Template NextGen-O2k.jpg


MitoPedia O2k and high-resolution respirometry: O2k-Open Support 



Magnesium Green in high-resolution respirometry (HRR)

Instrument

In high-resolution respirometry the MgG method is used with the O2k-FluoRespirometer with O2k-Fluo Smart-Module or O2k-Fluo LED2-Module selecting the Fluorescence-Sensor Blue/Filter Set MgG / CaG. Please see these pages for specific aspects of fluorescence measurements using the O2k.
Use black stoppers with black cover-slips to exclude disturbances by external light sources.
Before the experiments, switch off the illumination of the chambers (in [Oroboros O2k] \ [ O2k control ], or [F7]).
Set the Gain for Amp sensor to 1000 and light intensity (Amp polarization voltage [mV]) to 500. These values can be modified by the user if needed (e.g., if a different MgG concentration is used).

The fluorescent dye

Magnesium GreenTM is a registered trademark and available from Thermo Fisher Scientific (former: Invitrogen) in several formulations. For measuring mitochondrial ATP production a membrane impermeant formulation must be chosen (e.g. #M3733).

Preparation of MgG solution

Magnesium Green from Thermo Fischer Scientific (former Invitrogen): M3733 (Magnesium Green™, Pentapotassium Salt, cell impermeant); 1 mg vial, store at -20°C.
Preparation of 1.1 mM stock solution (dissolved in H2O):
  1. Dissolve the complete vial of MgG (1 mg) in 992.6 µL of deionized H2O.
  2. Divide into 40 µL portions into 0.2 mL Eppendorf tubes (protect from light, use dark tubes preferably).
  3. Store frozen at -20 °C protected from light.

Final MgG concentration in the chamber

Titration into 2 mL O2k-Chamber: 2 µL of 1.1 mM MgG stock solution, final concentration of 1.1 µM MgG.


Preparation of other solutions

MgCl2 solution

Recommendation: MgCl2 solution from Sigma: M1028, 1 M solution. Prepare aliquotes before use.
Preparation of 0.1 M stock solution (dissolved in H2O):
This solution will be used for the calibration.
  1. Add 900 µL of deionized H2O in an eppendorf tube.
  2. Add 100 µL of the MgCl2 1M solution and mix.

ADP solution

ADP from Merck (former Calbiochem): 117105 (Adenosine 5ʹ-Diphosphate, Potassium Salt), store at -20°C.
Preparation of 0.2 M stock solution (dissolved in H2O):
  1. Weigh 1.0026 g, dilute in H2O
  2. Adjust pH to 6.9 with KOH, preferably on ice (with pHmeter calibrated on the same condition)
  3. Complete with H2O to 10 mL
  4. Aliquote (200 µL) and store at -20°C.
  5. Avoid thawing and re-freezing the aliquotes.
  6. The concentration can be corrected by measuring the absorbance at 260 nm and using an extinction coefficient factor of εM = 15400 M-1⋅cm-1

ATP solution

ATP from Merck (former Sigma-Aldrich): A26209 (Adenosine 5′-triphosphate disodium salt hydrate), store at -20°C.
Preparation of 0.2 M stock solution (dissolved in H2O):
  1. Weigh 1.1023 g, dilute in H2O
  2. Adjust pH to 6.9 with KOH, preferably on ice (with pHmeter calibrated on the same condition)
  3. Complete with H2O to 10 mL
  4. Aliquote (200 µL) and store at -20°C.
  5. Avoid thawing and re-freezing the aliquotes.
  6. The concentration can be corrected by measuring the absorbance at 260 nm and using an extinction coefficient factor of εM = 15400 M-1⋅cm-1


Experimental media for the MgG assay

This method is not suitable for buffers containing high concentrations of Mg2+. It has been used in the Oroboros Laboratories with a modified formulation of MiR05 with 1 mM MgCl2 instead of the original 3 mM MgCl2. The medium should be prepared without MgCl2 (which should be added only during or right before the experiment), with the following composition (0.5 mM EGTA; 60 mM lactobionic acid; 20 mM taurine; 10 mM KH2PO4; 20 mM HEPES; 110 mM D-Sucrose; 1 g/L BSA (fatty acid free). The pH is adjusted with KOH to 7.1 as for MiR05-Kit, see MiPNet22.10 MiR05-kit for more information.
For the formulation of the buffer with which the method was described ("ANT buffer"), see: Chinopoulos 2014 Methods Enzymol.
Note that while Magnesium Green Kd for Mg2+ is 1.0 mM, Magnesium Green Kd for Ca2+ is 6 µM: this means that Magnesium Green binds stronger to Ca2+ than to Mg2+ and therefore cannot be used in the presence of significant concentrations of free Ca2+. Possible contaminating transition metals should be chelated by a small (µM range) concentration of EGTA, EDTA or DTPA.


Titration of EGTA and EDTA
To test the need to add these chelators, after addition of MgG, substrates and sample to the chamber, titrate EGTA (suggestion: 1 µM steps) until the signal no longer decreases, and then EDTA (suggestion: 1 µM steps) until the signal no longer decreases. This can be performed during the calibration and Kd determination assay. Once the concentrations of EGTA and/or EDTA to be added in the medium are determined, they can be used in the further experiments of mitochondrial ATP production with these substrates and sample.
Example of MgG traces where EGTA and EDTA were titrated (each event shows a titration of 1 µM EGTA or EDTA):
2018-10-03 PS3-03 - chelators titration.png


Inhibitors of ATPases and other enzymes
For samples that present contamination by ATPases and other ATP-consuming enzymes, the use of inhibitors such as sodium orthovanadate and beryllium fluoride is recommended (Chinopoulos et al., 2014).
Pham et al., 2014 used blebbistatin to inhibit myosin heavy chain and ouabain to inhibit Na+,K+-ATPase with rat heart homogenates.
The use of creatine (e.g. MiR05Cr) is also not recommended for this technique since it would activate creatine kinase.


Colour of media and chemicals used
For all fluorometric techniques, special care must be taken to avoid colored chemicals that might affect the fluorescence signal (excitation and emission wavelength spectra).
With MgG fluorophore, some uncouplers that present a yellow color might affect the signal.


Kd determination of ADP or ATP to Mg2+ using MgG

To assess the exchange of ADP/ATP by ANT using MgG, the Kd of ADP and ATP to Mg2+ should be previously calculated for the pertaining experimental conditions. This can be done in the O2k FluoRespirometer with a protocol in which a series of MgCl2 titrations are performed for calibration up to 1 mM MgCl2, and then a series of titrations with ADP or ATP are performed.
  1. Add to the chamber the same respiration media that will be used for experiments, without MgCl2.
  2. Add MgG to the chamber and allow stabilization of the signal if necessary. It is also possible to dilute MgG in the respiration medium prior to addition to the chamber
  3. Add carboxyatractyloside to inhibit the transport of ADP/ATP, oligomycin to inhibit ATP-synthase activity and Ap5A to inhibit adenylate kinase.
  4. Add to the chambers the same substrates and sample to be used in the experiments.
  5. Titrate MgCl2 to the chamber. 10 titrations in 0.1 mM steps are recommended (2 µL of 0.1 mM solution).
  6. Titrate ADP or ATP to the chamber. This must be done separately in two chambers, one for ADP and one for ATP.
  • ADP: 0.2 M stock solution, 19 titrations with 2.5 µL (0.25 mM per titration)
  • ATP: 0.2 M stock solution, 11 titrations with 2 µL (0.2 mM per titration)
For performing these protocols, choose the following DLP files: MgG_Calibration_and_Kd_determination_ADP_Mg.DLP and MgG_Calibration_and_Kd_determination_ATP_Mg.DLP
Example of traces from calibration with MgCl2 titrations, followed by ADP/ATP titrations for determination of the Kd:
MgG Calibration and Kd determination ADP Mg.png MgG Calibration and Kd determination ATP Mg.png


Calibrating the signal and calculating the Kd of ADP or ATP to Mg2+

For performing the calibration and Kd determination, choose the following Excel template in the folder DL-Protocols\Instrumental: "Template_MgG_Calibration_and_Kd_determination_ADP_and_ATP_to_Mg".


SUIT protocol for mitochondrial ATP production measurement with MgG

For a SUIT protocol with MgG for measurement of mitochondrial ATP production combined with O2 flux measurement, see: SUIT-006 MgG mt D055, SUIT-006.
For protocols with MgG, ADP must be prepared without MgCl2.


Calculating the mitochondrial ATP production

The calculation of ATP appearing in the medium is done taking in consideration the concentration of ADP added (initial concentration of ADP), the initial ATP concentration, which is considered 0 for no ATP addition, the Mg2+ concentration and the Kd of ADP and ATP for Mg2+. It is recommended to calculate both Kd values for the specific experimental conditions (the medium, substrates and sample used in the experiments).
For calculating the ATP production, choose the following Excel template in the folder DL-Protocols\SUIT: "Template - MgG ATP production analysis". A demo file is also provided.


SUITbrowser question: Mitochondrial ATP production

With the use of MgG, the mitochondrial ATP production can be assessed by high-resolution fluorespirometry.
Use the SUITbrowser to find the best protocol to answer this and other research questions.

Useful information

» A kinetic assay of mitochondrial ADP-ATP exchange rate mediated by the adenine nucleotide translocase by Chinopoulos C.
» Manual Fluorescent Magnesium Indicators.


Publications: MgG

 YearReferenceOrganismTissue;cellPreparationsStressDiseases
Arias-Reyes 2023 MitoFit2023Arias-Reyes C, Aliaga-Raduán F, Pinto-Aparicio R, Joseph V, Soliz J (2023) Mitochondrial plasticity in the retrosplenial cortex enhances ATP synthesis during acclimatization to hypoxia in mice but not in rats. MitoFit Preprints 2023.6. https://doi.org/10.26124/mitofit:2023-0006Mouse
Rat
Nervous systemPermeabilized tissueHypoxia
Quemeneur 2022 Sci Rep2022Quéméneur JB, Danion M, Cabon J, Collet S, Zambonino-Infante JL, Salin K (2022) The relationships between growth rate and mitochondrial metabolism varies over time. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-20428-9FishesSkeletal muscleHomogenate
Thoral 2021 Biol Lett2021Thoral E, Roussel D, Chinopoulos C, Teulier L, Salin K (2021) Low oxygen levels can help to prevent the detrimental effect of acute warming on mitochondrial efficiency in fish. Biol Lett 17:20200759.FishesSkeletal muscleHomogenate
Willis 2021 Sci Rep2021Willis JR, Hickey AJR, Devaux JBL (2021) Thermally tolerant intertidal triplefin fish (Tripterygiidae) sustain ATP dynamics better than subtidal species under acute heat stress. Sci Rep 11:11074.FishesNervous systemHomogenate
Salin 2021 Mar Environ Res2021Salin K, Mathieu-Resuge M, Graziano N, Dubillot E, Le Grand F, Soudant P, Vagner M (2021) The relationship between membrane fatty acid content and mitochondrial efficiency differs within- and between- omega-3 dietary treatments. Mar Environ Res 163:105205.FishesSkeletal muscleIsolated mitochondria
Cardoso 2021 BEC MgG2021Cardoso LHD, Doerrier C, Gnaiger E (2021) Magnesium Green for fluorometric measurement of ATP production does not interfere with mitochondrial respiration. Bioenerg Commun 2021.1. https://doi.org/10.26124/bec:2021-0001MouseHeartIsolated mitochondria
Devaux 2019 Front Physiol2019Devaux JBL, Hedges CP, Birch N, Herbert N, Renshaw GMC, Hickey AJR (2019) Acidosis maintains the function of brain mitochondria in hypoxia-tolerant triplefin fish: a strategy to survive acute hypoxic exposure? Front Physiol 9:1941.FishesNervous systemPermeabilized tissue
Isolated mitochondria
Oxidative stress;RONS
Hypoxia
Salin 2019 Proc Biol Sci2019Salin K, Villasevil EM, Anderson GJ, Lamarre SG, Melanson CA, McCarthy I, Selman C, Metcalfe NB (2019) Differences in mitochondrial efficiency explain individual variation in growth performance. Proc Biol Sci 286:20191466.FishesSkeletal muscle
Liver
Homogenate
Salin 2018 Integr Comp Biol2018Salin K, Villasevil EM, Anderson GJ, Selman C, Chinopoulos C, Metcalfe NB (2018) The RCR and ATP/O indices can give contradictory messages about mitochondrial efficiency. Integr Comp Biol 58:486-94.FishesLiverHomogenate
Masson 2017 Sci Rep2017Masson SWC, Hedges CP, Devaux JBL, James CS, Hickey AJR (2017) Mitochondrial glycerol 3-phosphate facilitates bumblebee pre-flight thermogenesis. Sci Rep 7:13107.HexapodsSkeletal musclePermeabilized tissue
Napa 2017 Int J Dent2017Napa K, Baeder AC, Witt JE, Rayburn ST, Miller MG, Dallon BW, Gibbs JL, Wilcox SH, Winden DR, Smith JH, Reynolds PR, Bikman BT (2017) LPS from P. gingivalis negatively alters gingival cell mitochondrial bioenergetics. Int J Dent 2017:2697210.HumanEndothelial;epithelial;mesothelial cellPermeabilized cells
Power 2016 Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol2016Power AS, Pham T, Loiselle DS, Crossman DH, Ward ML, Hickey AJ (2016) Impaired ADP channeling to mitochondria and elevated reactive oxygen species in hypertensive hearts. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00050.2016RatHeartPermeabilized tissue
Homogenate
Cardiovascular
Salin 2016 Physiol Rep2016Salin K, Villasevil EM, Auer SK, Anderson GJ, Selman C, Metcalfe NB, Chinopoulos C (2016) Simultaneous measurement of mitochondrial respiration and ATP production in tissue homogenates and calculation of effective P/O ratios. Physiol Rep 10.14814/phy2.13007.FishesLiverHomogenate
Chinopoulos 2014 Methods Enzymol2014Chinopoulos C, Kiss G, Kawamata H, Starkov AA (2014) Measurement of ADP-ATP exchange in relation to mitochondrial transmembrane potential and oxygen consumption. Methods Enzymol 542:333-48. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-416618-9.00017-0HumanHEKPermeabilized cells
Pham 2014 Am J Physiol2014Pham T, Loiselle D, Power A, Hickey AJ (2014) Mitochondrial inefficiencies and anoxic ATP hydrolysis capacities in diabetic rat heart. Am J Physiol 307:C499–507.RatHeartHomogenateIschemia-reperfusion
Oxidative stress;RONS
Mitochondrial disease
Diabetes
Myopathy
Power 2014 Physiol Rep2014Power A, Pearson N, Pham T, Cheung C, Phillips A, Hickey A (2014) Uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation and ATP synthase reversal within the hyperthermic heart. Physiol Rep pii:e12138.RatHeartIsolated mitochondriaTemperature
Goo 2013 Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol2013Goo S, Pham T, Han JC, Nielsen P, Taberner A, Hickey A, Loiselle D (2013) Multiscale measurement of cardiac energetics. Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol 40:671-81.RatHeartPermeabilized cells
Homogenate
Isolated mitochondria
Oxidative stress;RONS
Iftikar 2013 PLoS One2013Iftikar FI, Hickey AJ (2013) Do mitochondria limit hot fish hearts? Understanding the role of mitochondrial function with heat stress in Notolabrus celidotus. PLoS One 8:e64120.FishesHeartPermeabilized tissueOxidative stress;RONS
Chinopoulos 20092009Chinopoulos C, Vajda S, Csanady L, Mandi M, Mathe K, Adam-Vizi V (2009) A Novel Kinetic Assay of Mitochondrial ATP-ADP Exchange Rate Mediated by the ANT. Biophys J 96, 2490-504. doi:10.1016/j.bpj.2008.12.3915RatHeart
Nervous system
Liver
Isolated mitochondria
Abstracts: MgG